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its perforated spoon. [Illustration: BOY MODEL] "Ah! those were great days when Pochard was the life of the Bullier," he went on; "I remember the night he won ten thousand francs from the Russian. It didn't last long; Camille Leroux had her share of it--nothing ever lasted long with Camille. He was once courrier to an Austrian Baron, I remember. The old fellow used to frequent the Quarter in summer, years ago--it was his hobby. Pochard was a great favorite in those days, and the Baron liked to go about in the Quarter with him, and of course Pochard was in his glory. He would persuade the old nobleman to prolong his vacation here. Once the Baron stayed through the winter and fell ill, and a little couturiere in the rue de Rennes, whom the old fellow fell in love with, nursed him. He died the summer following, at Vienna, and left her quite a little property near Amiens. He was a good old Baron, a charitable old fellow among the needy, and a good bohemian besides; and he did much for Pochard, but he could not keep him sober!" [Illustration: BOUGUEREAU AT WORK] "After the old man's death," my friend continued, "Pochard drifted from bad to worse, and finally out of the Quarter, somewhere into misery on the other side of the Seine. No one heard of him for a few years, until he was again recognized as being the same Pochard returned again to the Quarter. He was hobbling about on crutches just as you see him there. And now, do you know what he does? Get up from where you are sitting," said Lachaume, "and look into the back kitchen. Is he not standing there by the door--they are handing him a small bundle?" "Yes," said I, "something wrapped in newspaper." "Do you know what is in it?--the carcass of the chicken you have just finished, and which the garcon carried away. Pochard saw you eating it half an hour ago as he passed. It was for that he was waiting." "To eat?" I asked. "No, to sell," Lachaume replied, "together with the other bones he is able to collect--for soup in some poorest resort down by the river, where the boatmen and the gamins go. The few sous he gets will buy Pochard a big glass, a lump of sugar, and a spoon; into the goblet, in some equally dirty 'boite,' they will pour him out his green treasure of absinthe. Then Pochard will forget the day--perhaps he will dream of the Austrian Baron--and try and forget Camille Leroux. Poor devil!" [Illustration: GEROME] Marguerite Girardet, the model, a
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